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The Lions returned to winning ways in Wellington but Jonny Wilkinson had an
unconvincing kicking display on his first appearance of the tour.
Man-of-the-match Gethin Jenkins touched down in the first half and Gareth
Thomas added a second try late in the game to ease the Lions to victory.
Despite posting 13 points himself, Wilkinson's accuracy with the boot was not
what it has been, and the Lions made life difficult for themselves by failing to
turn their first-half domination into a convincing advantage.
The Lions fielded a Test-strength side as they looked to put their tour back
on track after Saturday's loss to the Maori.
England World Cup stars Wilkinson, Jason Robinson and Neil Back were among a
handful of players making first tour starts for Sir Clive Woodward's team.
Skipper Brian O'Driscoll and full-back Josh Lewsey featured for the third time
in four games, Gavin Henson also started, and flanker Simon Easterby was handed
a Lions bow.
Wilkinson's appearance created a buzz of anticipation, yet he will be looking
to kick with a higher accuracy percentage in later games.
Wellington's All Blacks Tana Umaga, Jerry Collins, Rodney So'oialo and Conrad
Smith were all unavailable to coach John Plumtree.
Conditions were breezy as O'Driscoll led the Lions out, however the wind was
no excuse for Wilkinson blundered inside 30 seconds, drifting a drop-goal
attempt from 25 yards wide of the posts. Henson then did likewise.
Wilkinson made no mistake with an eighth-minute penalty attempt following more
livewire work by Shane Byrne.
Byrne's fellow Irishman Simon Easterby showed up well during the early
exchanges, but the Lions had territorial dominance and should have scored more
points.
Wilkinson fired a 16th-minute penalty wide and his general play also lacked
fluency, but his second penalty in the 24th minute moved the Lions 6-0 up.
Despite some brief threats from their All Blacks centre Ma'a Nonu, the home
side had barely featured, but they scored when it mattered.
Nonu won a penalty which fly-half Jimmy Gopperth fired between the posts.
Martin Corry came within inches of touching down with a great opportunity for
the Lions, and Ben Kay made a handling error when trying to gather the loose
ball.
While rain swept in, the Lions only had themselves to blame for not being
further ahead.
But then came a Lions try, started and finished by two Welsh Grand Slam
stars.
Scrum-half Dwayne Peel ghosted into space and, after Corry acted as an
intelligent link, prop Gethin Jenkins took Corry's pass and sprinted 15 metres
to score, with Wilkinson landing the touchline conversion.
Gopperth struck his second penalty, narrowing the deficit to 13-6 at
half-time.
Wilkinson kicked a third penalty in the 44th minute, before Nonu went close
for Wellington following a robust touchline charge.
Henson was replaced by fellow Welshman Stephen Jones, with Wilkinson moving to
inside centre to accommodate the fly-half.
Robinson also switched positions, taking up full-back duties when Shane Horgan
replaced Josh Lewsey.
Wellington clung onto the 10-point deficit as the closing stages approached,
but the try the Lions had been pressing for finally arrived three minutes from
time, when Thomas stole possession and burst clear for a kick-and-chase score
that Wilkinson converted.
Ultimately though, the Lions will feel frustrated at not scoring far more
points as they head south to Dunedin for Saturday's appointment with Otago.
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